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|    alt.fan.david-duchovny    |    He does look handsome in a speedo...    |    399 messages    |
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|    Message 313 of 399    |
|    pam to All    |
|    TL in 12-14-04 LA Times    |
|    17 Dec 04 09:40:10    |
      From: fakeaddress@mindspring.com              posted by Chimerical at the Haven:                     ===>       Los Angeles Times November 14, 2004 Sunday              November 14, 2004 Sunday       Home Edition              SECTION: SUNDAY CALENDAR; Calendar Desk; Part E; Pg. 21              LENGTH: 887 words              HEADLINE: Holiday Sneaks; OVER LUNCH;              She's developing some insecurities; TEA LEONI TRIES NEW       NEUROSES ON FOR SIZE PLAYING A WOMAN ADRIFT IN 'SPANGLISH.'              BYLINE: Lisa Rosen, Special to The Times              Tea LEONI hijacked lunch. The actress stopped her car in front       of Allegria restaurant in Malibu, plucked her designated lunch       date out of a booth, cleared off the passenger seat by throwing       a pile of family detritus into the back of her car, and took off.       It was a few days before Halloween.              On the way up PCH, Leoni explained to her guest that she'd come       home from a night shoot a few hours earlier, awakened to find she       was about due at her daughter's elementary school Halloween parade,       had all of four minutes to assemble and don her costume, and then       remembered that a lunch interview had been scheduled at the same time.       So, decked out in the sort of cowboy outfit you might see in the       musical "Oklahoma" -- neckerchief, embroidered denim shirt, jeans,       cowboy hat and boots -- she had no choice but to combine events       without warning.              Her patrician, blue-eyed beauty undimmed by the lack of sleep or       styling, Leoni was interrupted in her running explanation as another       driver tried to skip his turn at a four-way stop. "I'm going,       buddy, I've got a parade, back off, Jack!" Leoni joked.              She parked at the school and raced up to the parade grounds, guest       in tow. Classes of brightly costumed children circled the field as       parents applauded. Leoni spotted her 5-year-old daughter, West,       a.k.a. Sleeping Beauty, in the crowd. They waved to each other       eagerly, and after West's run around the ring, her mother scooped       her up in a hug and covered her with kisses. Plans were made       for an after-school play date, and then it was back to the car.              On the road again, Leoni asked, "What are we doing here?       Oh, right, 'Spanglish.' "              WHEN CULTURES COLLIDE              A comedy-drama by writer-director James L. Brooks, due out from       Columbia on Dec. 17, "Spanglish" stars Leoni and Adam Sandler as       the heads of a troubled family. They hire a housekeeper (Paz Vega)       who becomes deeply involved with their lives. Leoni hasn't seen it       -- nobody has -- and though she usually doesn't like to watch her       work, she wants to see this one.              The first reason: "so that I don't put an enormous foot in my mouth       during the press junket and feel like a complete ..." The first       noun she used was unprintable, so Leoni offered alternatives.       "Let's do 'jerk,' in quotes -- let's do 'fool' -- 'jackass,'       we can do 'jackass!'" When told "jackass" might be unusable,       she expressed disbelief. "You can't do 'jackass'? It's a mule.       OK, just say 'mule.'" There you have it. Tea Leoni doesn't want       to feel like a mule at the junket.              "I also want to see it because Adam gives an amazing performance here,"       she adds, back at the restaurant. After praising his work, she moved       on to Vega, whom she calls "phenomenal. This is a woman who is going       to take this town by storm if she wants."              Another reason to see it? Cloris Leachman, who plays her mother.       "She's such a hot ticket," says Leoni, who found working with her       consistently exciting. Plus, "she's 78, she looks like she's 65,       and she has a [rear end] that is more taut than David's."       (The David in question is Duchovny, Leoni's husband.)              For all the enjoyment she got from working with her costars, Leoni had       a surprisingly hard time on the shoot. "It was the most exhausting       journey in my career, hands down," said Leoni, 38. She played Deborah,       a woman who lost her job and goes through an identity crisis,       hurting everyone she loves in the process.              "Deborah is almost really smart, she's almost got a sense of humor,       she's almost accessible, she's almost right, she's almost appropriate,       but she's not. And so in a way I found myself, for close to a year,       playing this person who could not be understood by anybody in her life."       As a result, Leoni found her time on the set lonely and isolating.       Her kids (son Miller is 2) came to the set only a couple of times       because she didn't want them around her as Deborah.              Leoni has played a lot of neurotic women to great comic effect,       perhaps most notably in the 1996 film "Flirting With Disaster."       She finds those roles a lot of fun, because "I can transfer my own       neurotic tendencies into their neurotic tendencies." She calls it       a great, legally artistic transference. "It can be very liberating       because now the neurosis isn't yours anymore, and it gets its yayas       out on someone else's time."              But this time, the reverse seemed to occur -- Leoni found that the       character's negative energy was being thrown onto her, like a heap       of dirty laundry. As a result, "I really lost my confidence,       and I felt like the character was out of control."              Leoni saw that she would have to take more of a risk than with any       previous role. "This was really about how scary was I going to let       it be for me, and work in an unknown place and embrace Jim Brooks'       process, which is for all intents and purposes stressful and       maddening and genius and exhausting and enlightening."              She credits Duchovny for giving her the love and understanding she       needed to manage that process. "He's very much a reason why I got       through it, and I think got through it with bells on, where I was able       to walk away and say, 'This was a great, growing experience for me,       I learned a lot, and I'm proud of what is out there.' I haven't even       seen it, and I know I'm proud of it, because I went someplace that       I haven't been before."              Then, lunch over, Leoni went back to someplace she hadn't been nearly       enough lately -- bed.              GRAPHIC: PHOTO: REACHING BEYOND: "It was the most exhausting journey        in my career, hands down," Leoni said. "I really lost my confidence        and I felt like the character was out of control."              PHOTOGRAPHER: Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times              LOAD-DATE: November 14, 2004       <===              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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